Abraham Jewett  |  June 1, 2023

Category: Fees

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Close up of Hyatt signage, representing the Hyatt resort fees lawsuit.
(Photo Credit: Kaesler Media/Shutterstock)

Hyatt resort fees lawsuit overview: 

  • Who: The State of Texas filed a lawsuit against Hyatt Hotels Corp. 
  • Why: Texas claims Hyatt misleads consumers and violates state law by allegedly omitting mandatory fees from quoted prices for its daily room rates. 
  • Where: The lawsuit was filed in the 433rd District Court, Comal County, Texas.
  • What are my options: Book your next vacation with Travala rather than through Hyatt.

Hyatt Hotels violates Texas law by marketing hotel daily room rates at prices that are not available as advertised due to hidden “resort fees,” a new lawsuit filed by the state alleges. 

The state of Texas claims Hyatt, after advertising a certain rate for its hotel rooms, changes the final rate for the room at checkout, fails to include mandatory fees in its quoted price and bills consumers twice for the same mandatory charges.

Texas argues Hyatt will also sometimes fail to even provide the goods, services or vouchers that are supposedly covered by the fees it charges.

“Hyatt’s lack of transparency in advertising thwarts consumers’ comparison shopping, misleads consumers about the true room rate, and places hotels that do not engage in similarly deceptive practices at a competitive disadvantage,” the Hyatt lawsuit states. 

Mandatory fees charged by Hyatt have made company millions of dollars in ‘fraudulent charges,’ lawsuit says

Texas claims Hyatt’s fees have led to millions of dollars in fraudulent charges and constitute a misleading and anti-competitive practice that has harmed consumers and violated the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (DTPA). 

Texas argues further that, by allegedly “omitting mandatory fees” from its quoted room rates, the company “causes consumers to mistakenly believe that the cost of a room at a Hyatt property is more affordable than its competitors.” 

“For years Hyatt has used mandatory fees to dupe unsuspecting Texans by not including mandatory fees in the advertised room rate,” the Hyatt lawsuit states. 

Texas is demanding injunctive and declaratory relief along with an order for Hyatt to pay civil penalties to the state not exceeding $10,000 for each violation of the DTPA. 

In other Texas news, a group of five women who were denied access to an abortion while facing medical crises filed a lawsuit against the state earlier this year.

Have you been charged a mandatory fee while booking a hotel room from Hyatt? Let us know in the comments.

Texas is represented by Christopher D. Hilton, Johnathan Stone and Jameson C. Joyce of the Office of the Attorney General, General Litigation Division.

The Hyatt resort fees lawsuit is State of Texas v. Hyatt Hotels Corp., et al., Case No. C2023-0884D, in the 433rd District Court, Comal County, Texas.


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13 thoughts onHyatt lawsuit claims hotel chain charges unfair resort fees

  1. ronnee says:

    not only a member but they charged me extra as well

  2. Melissa Cuevas says:

    I’ve stayed at Hyatt in various location I always thought why they charge a resort fee please add me

  3. Karen Lance says:

    I have stayed at Hyatt’s that have this but not from the state of Texas. If this opens up to other states please include me.

  4. Erik Wissing says:

    Please add me

  5. bubba bouey says:

    The money goes to the state of Texas and Lawyers not back to consumers. SMH

  6. Alex says:

    The Federal Trade Commission should be all over this. Hyatt, Marriott, Hilton…they’re all guilty.

  7. AARRON LIGHT says:

    Just got back from a two-night stay – ouch fees were almost what the room cost, but why they need a resort fee on top of those fees makes me wonder why I paid so much for the room at their resort in the first place. Think about it, that’s why you want to stay at their resort in the first place, for their features vs. the others.

  8. Vadim Danilov says:

    The class action lawsuit should be filed nationwide because almost all hotels charge those fee even though they have nothing to do with being resorts.

  9. Faith says:

    If this goes nationwide, I’m in. My friend and I went to a hotel in Phoenix unaware of the extra fee. Long sorry short, our stay seemed to go up exponentially because of this… From $800 to $1400… Thank goodness we had the extra money but won’t ever do business with them again

  10. Fred Cajet says:

    Some enterprising attorney should sue all “hotels” nationwide that charge a resort fee without making people aware of it before you show up. I travel over 100 days per year, and am so irritated by Resort Fees that I recently bought a small RV, so I don’t have to deal with these thieving “resorts’ any more. Its way less expensive than the “resort” add-on costs, and I have my own bed, kitchen and bath. These scam hotels have lost my business completely. Go sue them and make them reimburse all customers who paid these in the past – my share would be enough to pay for my RV completely.

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